Why Being A Pessimist Matters

The old glass half full/half empty debate has kept many a beer-fuelled conversation going – at least it did in my student days.

But does it really matter which side of the fence you come down on?

Before I answer that, I’d like you to consider a well known phenomenon we’re all familiar with.  Have you ever bought a new car – I mean one that’s a new make, model and colour for you – and suddenly noticed they’re everywhere?

Where were they before?

Well, of course they were there then too, but your brain didn’t register them as important so you took no notice.

This is a well documented psychological phenomenon.

So, if you’re a pessimist, you’ll naturally notice all the faults in any plan.  You’ll see reasons why your marriage won’t last and you’ll expect your health to fail.

It’s hardly a recipe for a happy life, is it?

Of course, the pessimistic readers out there will argue that it works fine because it protects them from failure and disappointment, but the truth is, their whole life is a disappointment.

The glass-half-full brigade, on the other hand, will be actively seeking out opportunities, carving them where perhaps they didn’t exist before.  They tend not to ask how but to go for a “I’ll figure it out” approach to challenges and obstacles.

This principle applies to anything.

If you’re insecure, you’ll notice signs of rejection.  A pause in a conversation may become a meaningful silence, indicating the other person doesn’t want to talk to you, for example.

Whereas to a self confident person, it’s just the other person being quiet or thoughtful.  Self confident people don’t take it personally.

The patterns aren’t difficult to spot.  I could come up with lots more examples, but you can probably do that for yourself.

The question is: Is there anything we can do about it?

I’ve had clients who’ve told me about terrible things they’ve been through and they explain how they’ve been hurt by life.

I have great compassion for such tales, but I’ve learned that neither empathy nor sympathy helps them.

You see, the reason they tell me – or any transformative professional, such as a counsellor or psychotherapist – is because they’ve decided that their experiences justify their fear of the future.

Before I met my lovely wife in 2006, I spent quite a bit of time on internet dating sites.  I met some lovely women – some real characters among them.  But I never formed a long-term or “meaningful” relationship with any of them.

Why?

Well, of course there were multiple reasons but eventually I figured out that most people using those sites, (me included at the time!), had one thing in common:

We’d all been hurt in love before!

And so at every date, we’d be mentally dancing around each other to look for the warning signs.

One woman even told me she really liked me so she wasn’t going to see me again in case she fell in love with me!

(How’s that for mixed messages?)

Fortunately, I knew enough about NLP to realise that, having spotted my own pattern of “don’t get close in case you hurt me,” I could change it.

And I did.

Had I not done so, it’s highly unlikely I’d be heading for the 10th anniversary of a wonderful marriage now.

I know that sounds like an “easier-said-than-done” throwaway line but in fact I probably made it harder than it needs to be.

I did know some techniques which I used on myself.  But now I get that I could have got Harry Potter to do one of his spells on me and it would have worked – as long as I’d believed in it.

The techniques I deployed may have been the agent for change, but what really made the difference was simply changing the way I thought about my situation.  I just saw that it wasn’t the situation that was causing my fears about love and commitment – it was my thoughts about the situation, love, relationships 
 and all that jazz!

When my thoughts changed, my life changed.

Why Is Change So Difficult?

I was going to end this article but I can’t leave it there, can I?

Everyone will be screaming back at their computers claiming they can’t change.

If they could change, they’d have done it, wouldn’t they?

It’s okay.

I’d be right there along with you.  Or at least, I would have been until relatively recently.

Once again, there’s a false assumption behind the questions and our seeming inability to change at will.

It’s because it doesn’t require will power!

We think we have to do it all.

But that’s like saying, “I’ll have to have a couple of hours off tomorrow.  I need to grow my fingernails.”

Years ago there was a sitcom on British TV set in a department store.  One character, Mrs. Slocombe, (played by the late, great Mollie Sugden), was a middle aged lady in charge of a department – lingerie I think.

One day, she declared pompously to the boss, “I won’t be in tomorrow afternoon.  I’m having my hair done.”

To which he replied, “In the firm’s time?”

She stated indignantly, “Well, it grows in the firm’s time!”

Nature takes care of so much, yet when it comes to our patterns of thought and habits we think we must have made them so we’d better unmake them.

But we don’t make them, do we?

Nobody sits down and consciously decides to look for the negative in life.  It’s just that, when we’ve done it for long enough and maybe enough people have told us that we have that outlook, then we take it as fact.

At that point we conclude that it must be part of our personality.

As if it was fixed in stone.

As if it were true.

It’s true if you keep telling yourself – and others – that that’s what you’re like.

I have an idea for you.

Go to YouTube and watch a Charlie Chaplin movie.  Watch him dig himself into some hopeless hole.  And laugh at him, of course.  Nobody behaves like that in real life.

Except, of course, we all do.

That’s why he’s so funny – even a hundred years on.  We can identify with him.

When you’ve done that, take a five minute break, close your eyes and watch your own negative thoughts about anything.

About your love life, if you’re in that place.  Or your money situation.  Or a business issue.  Or a global one.

But watch them like a Chaplin movie.  Don’t try and change a thing.  But notice that you can watch your own thoughts.

And there’s a watcher who isn’t having any of those thoughts at all!

The watcher is as detached from the thoughts as you were from Charlie C.

Do you get it?

You’re not your thoughts, in just the same way that you’re not your fingernails.

Leave them alone and they’ll adjust themselves all on their own.

Your nature is to be happy, playful and positive.  Watch any infant and you’ll see that’s true.

There’s no such thing as a “born worrier.”

You don’t have to change your mind.  You only have to leave it alone.

And that’s why being a pessimist matters.

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If you’ve found this article helpful, you may also like my book, “How To Stop Anxiety” now available on Amazon Kindle. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078ZKTBRZ

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